First came the team's most ambitious idea: Use the gorgeous glass winding staircase in the center of the museum to paint a picture of busy professionals just leaving a meeting, chatting with each other, holding a coffee mug emblazoned with the WBJ logo and busily working on a smartphone. If all these multiple elements came together, it could have been a really great photo, but they were just too difficult to capture all at once in a single image.

Yet, Team Russian Icons was unrelenting in its ideas and can-do attitude. Bitar, Lemerise, Clark and Furi-Perry studied all the exhibits and rooms to came up with tons of ideas: using the jail-like study rooms, sipping tea in a gallery, moving various artifacts around.

Photo | Erika Sidor

This was the best shot we were able to get with the winding staircase.

To this end, I should point out what an amazing hosts museum CEO & Curator Kent Russell and his staff were. They stayed late after museum closing, offered to change the ambient lighting colors, and were helpful when needed and hands-off when not. Moreover, Russell was willing to move artifacts around to help us with the shoots. Particularly, he moved an antique Russian water dispenser to a painting gallery where Clark and Furi-Perry were setting a scene of Team Russian Icons gathering around a small, refined table.

The first scene they set was using the museum cafeteria's tea bags and mugs (including the WBJ one), along with the water dispenser. This made for a very pleasant photo.

Photo | Erika Sidor

The WBJ mug makes its first and only cameo. It was specially made by the daughter of WBJ Events Manager Kris Prosser.

But then Bitar reminded everyone he brought clear shot glasses (still in the box) and a bottle of vodka. Clark upped the ante by bringing over Russian nesting dolls from the children's area of the museum. Lemerise and Bitar opened the glasses, we got the vodka bottle in position, and .... they filled their shot glasses with water. WATER!!

It was definitely the smart move on their part. We ended up needing to take at least three photos of them physically drinking from the shot glasses, so – if they had used the vodka – they would have been drunk fairly quickly. They had all driven to the museum and had good-sized commutes home. Plus, we did several more rounds of photos after the vodka shots were taken.

It wouldn't have been the decision I would have made, but then there would have been a better than 50-percent chance I would have gotten sick in the lovely Museum of Russian Icons. For Furi-Perry, Clark, Lemerise and Bitar, I applaud both their restraint and forward-mindedness. That's probably part of the reason they are all as successful as they are.